ABSTRACT: 1. CHALLENGING LIBERTY, by Angela Liberatore.
2. MOBILITY CONTROLS AND NEW TECHNOLOGIES, by Didier Bigo.
3. ARE YOU WHO YOU SAY YOU ARE?, by Juliet Lodge.
4. UNREADABLE PAPERS?, by Elspeth Guild.
5. THE USE OF BIOMETRICS IN EU DATABASES AND IDENTITY DOCUMENTS, by Evelien
Brouwer.
6. FRONTEX AND THE EU’S INTEGRATED BORDER MANAGEMENT STRATEGY, by Sergio
Carrera.
7. PNR AND COMPENSATION, by Gloria González Fuster and Paul De Hert.
8. THE CHALLENGES OF SECURE BORDERS AND E-SECURITY, by Juliet Lodge.
9. PROVING WHO YOU ARE: A CHALLENGE FOR PUBLIC POLICY, by Juliet Lodge.

ABSTRACT: PART I: OVERVIEW:.
1. Extraterritorial Immigration Control: What role for legal guarantees?, by
Bernard Ryan.
2. Extraterritorial Immigration Control in the 21st Century: The individual
and the state transformed, by Valsamis Mitsilegas.
Part II: INTERNATIONAL LAW ASPECTS:.
3. The Concept of State Jurisdiction and the Applicability of the
Non-refoulement Principle to Extraterritorial Interception Measures, by Anja
Klug and Tim Howe.
4. The International Law of the Sea and Migration Control, by Richard Barnes.
5. The Legal Framework Concerning the Smuggling of Migrants at Sea under the
UN Protocol on the Smuggling of Migrants by Land, Sea and Air, by Tom Obokata.
Part III: EUROPEAN UNION ASPECTS:.
6. Europe Beyond its Borders: Refugee and human rights protection in
extraterritorial immigration control, by Maarten den Heijer.
7. Extraterritorial Migration Control and Human Rights: Preserving the
responsibility of the EU and its Member States, by Evelien Brouwer.
8. Extraterritorial Border Controls in the EU: the role of Frontex in
operations at sea, by Anneliese Baldaccini.
9. The Transformation of European Border Controls, by Elspeth Guild and Didier
Bigo.
Part IV: STATE PRACTICE:.
10. Migration Control at Sea: The Italian case, by Alessia di Pascale.
11. Extraterritorial strategies to tackle irregular immigration by sea: A
Spanish perspective, by Paula García Andrade.
12. Controlling Migration by Sea: The Australian case, by Susan Kneebone.
13. US Migrant Interdiction Practices in International and Territorial Waters,
by Niels Frenzen.
14. The UK and Extra-territorial Immigration Control: Entry clearance and
juxtaposed control, by Gina Clayton.
Selected bibliography.

ABSTRACT: Chapter 1: Introduction, by Martha Crenshaw.
PART I: Governance, Civil Liberties, and Securitization:.
Chapter 2. Counterterrorism Regimes and the Rule of Law: The Effects of
Emergency Legislation on Separation of Powers, Civil Liberties, and Other
Fundamental Constitutional Norms, by John E. Finn.
Chapter 3: The Uses and Abuses of Terrorist Designation Lists, by Chantal de
Jonge Oudraat and Jean-Luc Marret.
Chapter 4: Immigration Policy as Counterterrorism: The Effects of Security on
Migration and Border Control in the European Union, by Gallya Lahav.
PART II: National Counterterrorism Responses:.
Chapter 5: The Social Contract and the Three Types of Terrorism: Democratic
Society in the United Kingdom After 9/11 and 7/7, by Dirk Haubrich.
Chapter 6 : Confronting Terrorism in Northern Ireland and the Basque Country:
Challenges for Democracy and Legitimacy, by Rogelio Alonso.
Chapter 7: French Responses to Terrorism from the Algerian War to the Present,
by Jeremy Shapiro.
Chapter 8: Germany’s Response to 9/11: The Importance of Checks and Balances,
by Giovanni Capoccia.
Chapter 9: The Consequences of Counterterrorist Policies in Israel, by Ami
Pedahzur and Arie Perliger.
Chapter 10: Terrorism as Conventional Security for Democracies: America,
Japan, and Military Action in the Asia-Pacific, by David Leheny.

ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:.
Introduction: A Circularity and its Ramifications.
I. Institutional Context:.
1. Political Discourses about Borders: On the Emergence of a European
Political Community, by RICARD ZAPATA-BARRERO.
2. The Borders Paradox: The Surveillance of Movement in a Union without
Internal Frontiers, by VALSAMIS MITSILEGAS.
3. Effective Rights for Third-Country Nationals?, by HELEN OOSTEROM-STAPLES.
II. Theoretical Issues:.
4. Phenomenology of Space: Being Here and Elsewhere, by BERNHARD WALDENFELS.
5. Finding Normativity: Immigration Policy and Normative Formation, by PETER
FITZPATRICK.
6. Breaking Promises to Keep Them: Immigration and the Boundaries of
Distributive Justice, by HANS LINDAHL.
7. Migrants, Humans and Human Rights: The Right to Move as the Right to Stay,
by BERT VAN ROERMUND.
III. Politico-Legal Alternatives:.
8. The Area of Freedom, Security and Justice and the Political Morality of
Migration and Integration, by DORA KOSTAKOPOULOU.
9. Proximity and Paradox: Law and Politics in the New Europe, by BONNIE HONIG.
10. Citizenship and Electoral Rights in the Multi-Level ‘Euro-Polity’: The
Case of The United Kingdom, by JO SHAW.
11. Denizenship and Deterritorialisation in the European Union, by NEIL
WALKER.
Index.

ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:.
1. Global surveillance and policing: borders, security, identity -
Introduction by Elia Zureik and Mark B. Salter.
2. Some conceptual issues in the study of borders and surveillance by Gary T.
Marx.
3. At the threshold of security: a theory of international borders by Mark B.
Salter.
4. Borders, migration and economic integration: towards a new political
economy of borders by Hélène Pellerin.
5. The border is everywhere: ID cards, surveillance and the other by David
Lyon.
6. Borders, bodies and biometrics: towards identity management by Benjamin J.
Muller.
7. Expanding surveillance: connecting biometric information systems to
international police cooperation, by Nancy Lewis.
8. What happens when you book an airline ticket? The collection and processing
of passenger data post-9/11, by Colin J. Bennett.
9. Potential threats and potential criminals: data collection in the national
security entry-exit registration system, by Jonathan Finn.
10. Imperial embrace? Identification and constraints on mobility in a
hegemonic empire, by John Torpey.
11. Fencing the line: analysis of the recent rise in security measures along
disputed and undisputed boundaries, by John W. Donaldson.
12. 'Getting ahead of the game': border technologies and the changing space of
governance, by Katja Franko Aas.
13. Immigration controls and citizenship in the political rhetoric of New
Labour, by Don Glynn.
14. Freedom of movement inside 'fortress Europe', by Willem Maas.